The Justice Department recently gave a $1 million grant to improve the area. On Wednesday, community leaders will get together to strategize on ways they can challenge crime in the neighborhood.

Dave Kirk, a sociology professor at the University of Texas, says the area is in “desperate” need of change – considering the size of the area, and its majority of law-abiding residents. “We are talking about roughly 40,000 residents across three neighborhood planning areas,” he says.

Kirk’s helping the Austin Police Department develop strategies to positively change Rundberg. His initial strategy involves becoming part of the fabric of a neighborhood where he doesn’t belong: He’s an academic who doesn’t live there, but he says going door-to-door and meeting neighbors has helped.

“I think developing trust between myself and the community makes me more effective,” Kirk says. “It’s important for APD and the community to develop trust.”

To do that, Austin Police are looking to meet with Rundberg community leaders tonight at 6 p.m.to discuss ideas to make the neighborhood safer. Kirk says one idea that’s come out of preliminary meetings has already prompted neighbors into action.

“A lot of housing – particularly in the multi-family units – are unsafe,” he says. “So the community had some great ideas, such as working with the code compliance department to try to remedy all the unsafe housing conditions. It just so happens that when you’ve got unsafe housing there is also, often times, criminal activity.”

Earlier this year, police began tagging and towing vehicles that were illegally parked or vehicles that were blocking sidewalks and crosswalks around the Rundberg area – the “broken windows” theory of policing that begins with a focus on an area’s environment.